I assume you now mean to put the glass shower door where you have the 18.7"/23.7" marked, facing the center of the room. But the design was for a frameless glass enclosure we just got lazy and never ordered it. At 68" long, only a bit of splash goes over the tub pony wall out past the shower floor. Our shower wasn't originally meant to be a wet-shower, our contractor offered to drop the joists for free once he we had all the walls opened up and saw it could be done. We have 82" between the tub ledge and the wall, so there's a 6" gap on each side not obvious in the photo, which helps with the elbow room and the centering. Looks like you've got just about 64" to work with there are double-sink vanities that would fit for sure but one sink and mirror so close to the right wall might not look aesthetically great, along with limited elbow room. Our double-sink vanity is 70" wide, wall-hung. Overall ours does not feel cramped at all. While it probably makes the room feel a bit bigger, the vanity storage is shallow and in hindsight would have used a 20" deep vanity and also added medicine cabinet mirrors.Ģ4" Hotel towel rack above the tub next to the mirror, and another 24" double towel bar by the toilet and door. Ours is only 14" deep (sinks that stick out a bit more) - but that was just coincidental with the modern vanity we liked. We did fit a double-sink vanity, there's extra space on both sides, so you could definitely squeeze one in with your smaller space. While we never ended up putting in the glass shower panels to make the space feel even bigger, the original plan was a stationary glass between the shower and toilet, and a 27" glass door to the knee wall. My wife takes a lot of baths and actually wanted the smaller 5' to fill it faster, but that would have needed a drop-in, I wanted the larger tub so flanged on three sides (as we didn't want the shower any wider). Our shower is 3' wide to the knee wall our tub is 5.5', so a 5' tub would work in your space. Our architect used a pocket door, not sure if that was required to not swing into the toilet clearance or not. The only difference for ours is the toilet (not visible) is turned 90 deg towards the vanity, as Mrs Pete suggested, giving plenty of clearance in front. So not quite as small, but I think it could work for you. We have a pretty small master bath, 102 x 123, with almost the layout you're thinking of. On the other hand, if you go with one sink and one trendy /narrow mirror in the middle, you'd avoid this toilet-mirror problem. and no one wants to watch himself or herself on the toilet. The negative is that if you do this AND you stick with duplicate sinks, you'd have a mirror straight ahead of the toilet. If you turn the toilet 90 degrees, you'd have the necessary additional space in front of the toilet, and you'd have a little more length for the shower. With space at a premium, could the hamper be placed just outside the bathroom door? Mrs Pete, the tub towels are hanging on the far wall, right next to the tub.Īh, I see that now - note that you're going to have to lean/reach 3' across to reach the towel, and it's going to be a narrow bar.Īlso, yes, that is a hamper, between the vanity and tub. I did this in one bathroom and I don’t evern notice it.Ģ4" is standard depth for kitchen counters bathroom vanities tend towards 21" deep. You could even do a little narrower counter and cabinets to gain more room, ie 20” instead of 24”. Smaller sinks still take up more space than one single done-right sink and they still require pipes underneath, which steal much-needed storage space. I would use smaller sinks to give more counter space.
0 Comments
Leave a Reply. |
AuthorWrite something about yourself. No need to be fancy, just an overview. ArchivesCategories |